Jane Austen

topic- how Jane Austen portrays women in her novel
  1. she always portrays women as strong and independent
  2. something she stressed in her novels was how important it was for women to marry well
  3. women have a sense of irony and razor sharp wit
  4. Austen’s heroines are represented at their best–strong, independent yet loving and dedicated to family
  5. a woman's reputation is very important
  6. they are excepted to behave in certain ways
  7. stepping outside of socials norms could lead to be ostracized
  8. their class status is inevitable
  9. a women s education was only excepted in certain areas
  10. they have a strong grasp of a traditional female role
  11. female characters were excepted to marry to improve they're situation in life
  12. women had limited options and needed to make the best of them
  13. all women want to be married
  14. women are often portrayed as more clever than men
  15. her characters are often in dominate positions even though they're women
  16. aggressive women could be accepted
  17. women must keep a spotless reputation
  18. woman's out ward manners show their moral character
  19. women must follow the rules of propriety to succeed
  20. women should use lively debate to get around social rules
  21. women play important roles in life
  22. women are judgmental
  23. women are quick to display their emotions
  24. common sense is important for a women s success
  25. they must find a way to deal with the social requirement to get married
  26. women were oppressed
  27. she always has a strong female leading character
  28. many times her female characters were youthful and energetic
  29. female characters are fixated on marriage
  30. marriage is the surest route to happiness for women
  31. women should marry for love
  32. unmarried women had no significant role in society
  33. other women s poor decision effect the women around her
  34. women should want to move up in social standing
  35. a lack of social grace would harm a women
  36. foolish women can be found at every level of society
  37. reading is an important way for women to better themselves
  38. living with a man out of wedlock completely ruins a women
  39. a smart women can change her mind
  40. marriage for some women was the only way out
  41. women could improve their social status by marriage men really could not
  42. female characters have a strength of will
  43. female characters have self respect
  44. a sane women must want to be married
  45. in her time period women were rarely written about
  46. beauty was a women s most important quality
  47. it was difficult to be a woman then
  48. rules must be followed no matter what
  49. Jane austen’s novels challenge the role in which society placed women
  50. She treats women not as fragile creatures, but as competent human beings capable of making rational decisions
  51. A young woman in the aristocracy was expected to marry into wealth if not also into upper class
  52. women as means of bettering oneself in addition to money in general are prevalent
  53. the lines of class for women were strictly drawn
  54. women were not expected to maintain a life for themselves
  55. Anthony Trollope declared that Throughout all her works, a sweet lesson of
    homely household womanly virtue is ever being taught.
  56. it was okay to marry for money and status
  57. men were easily ambulated by women
  58. suitable matches were well thought out
  59. it was up to a women to ensure she was as smart as a men
  60. a woman's accomplishments were limited to music, drawing, and languages
  61. it was considered a violation of etiquette for a woman to decline a man's invitation to dance
  62. women are not meant to be taken seriously but Austen's characters are the exception
  63. her characters make their decisions independently
  64. presents a rather cool and objective view of the limited options open to women
  65. Jane Austen wrote: "...you must not let anything depend on my own opinion. Your own feelings & none but your own, should determine such an important point".
  66. the purpose of such accomplishments was often only to attract a husband
  67. makes a positive statement by having Elizabeth insist on being treated as a "rational creature", rather than as an "elegant female", when trying to make her "No" be understood as "No" to Mr. Collins.
  68. "Single women have a dreadful propensity for being poor, which is one very strong argument in favor of matrimony"
    -- Jane Austen, letter of March 13, 1816
  69. there was no real way for young women of the "genteel" classes to strike out on their own or be independent
  70. Few occupations were open to them -- and those few that were (such as being a governess, i.e. a live-in teacher for the daughters or young children of a family) were not highly respected, and did not generally pay well or have very good working conditions
  71. Lady Catherine: "Young women should always be properly guarded and attended, according to their situation in life"
  72. marriage is pretty much the only way of ever getting out from under the parental roof
  73. In addition to all these reasons why the woman herself might wish to be married, there could also be family pressure on her to be married
  74. women must be willing to overcome obstacles to get what they want
  75. the warping effects of society can be over come by a women
  76. a women should perfect her ability to socialize
  77. mastering courtship is critical for a women
  78. control of language is something a women must master
  79. not all her female characters marry for love
  80. the main female character crosses social boundaries and women roles for the time period




work cited;
Spark Notes Pride and Prejudice. New York: Spark, 2007. Print.



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